ELEPHANTS MADE HOMELESS ON INDONESIAN ISLAND OF SUMATRA


Environmental Panorama
International
March of 2006

23/03/2006 - Gland, Switzerland – WWF has discovered that ten endangered wild Sumatran elephants are being kept chained to trees without enough food or water in central Riau in Indonesia, having been made homeless by the complete destruction of their forest. The elephants were raiding crops and threatening a nearby village before being captured by local authorities ten days ago.

The ten elephants are part of a herd of between 17 and 51 in Riau's Bengkalis District. The Riau government said it wanted to capture and translocate all of the elephants to the newly designated Tesso Nilo National Park.

“These ten elephants are the latest casualties in the escalating human-elephant conflict in central Sumatra, the direct result of uncontrolled destruction of their forest habitat,” said Nazir Foead, Head of WWF Indonesia’s Species Programme. “These elephants need room to live, which means ending problematic pulp and oil palm development. In the short term, they should get a suitable location.”

Currently, only 38,000ha of the Tesso Nilo National Park have been protected out of a proposed 100,000ha. The entire area must be protected before it can be considered as a feasible location for the captured elephants, WWF says.

“What we are seeing here is the result of inaction and ineptitude,” said Foead. “The local government has not implemented the Riau Human-Elephant Conflict Mitigation Protocol agreed upon in 2004, nor has it committed to stop zoning elephant forest habitat for conversion. Illegal logging and encroachment is even rife in those areas that are officially protected.”

Six elephants were recently found dead in an oil palm plantation at the border of Riau and north Sumatra, apparently poisoned in retaliation for raiding crops. Faced with rapidly shrinking habitat and continual conflict with local people, Riau's elephant population has been reduced from an estimated 700 to 350 individuals in the last seven years.

This case of human-elephant conflict appears to be a direct result of forest clearing in Riau's Libo Forest, one of the few remaining retreats of the Sumatran elephant in central Sumatra. Libo is rapidly being converted into plantations, fields and settlements, often without the necessary licenses. The Balai Raja Wildlife Sanctuary, within the Libo forest block, contained about 16,000ha of forest when it was declared in 1986. Today, only 260ha of forest cover remain. A multinational paper company, Asia Pulp and Paper (APP), uses timber cleared in Libo for its Riau mills.

WWF is urging the Riau government to immediately stop all illegal logging, encroachment and conversion of forest in Riau to oil palm and pulp plantations. WWF is also calling on Riau authorities to provide immediate food, water and medical treatment to the ten elephants in their custody.

“Riau authorities do not have a professional team to provide proper care to the elephants,” said Foead.

“A new, more competent team, for example from Lampung, in southern Sumatra, should be brought in. We will be ready to help them.”

END NOTES:

• In 2004, NGOs and the Indonesian Ministry of Forestry developed a human-elephant conflict mitigation protocol for Riau that would avoid the kinds of cases that have occurred in recent weeks. If the protocol had been in place, it would have taught communities how to mitigate human elephant conflict without suffering losses and without the need to capture elephants.

• Since 2004, WWF has worked with Riau BKSDA (Riau Province's Natural Resource Conservation Agency) and the communities surrounding the Tesso Nilo forest to avoid losses from raiding elephants. During that time, losses declined dramatically, no houses have been destroyed and there have been no loss of human or elephant lives.

• Riau has lost 57 percent of its forests from 6.4 million hectares to 2.7 million hectares – over the past 23 years, many of them through illegal conversion. Riau has lost half of its elephant population in the last seven years, with the remaining population numbering only about 350. Protected areas for elephants like in Mahato and Balai Raja have been almost completely cleared illegally with no action by the local authority to stop it. WWF calls on the government to immediately stop all forest conversions in Riau.

• Elephant Poisonings: Results from necropsies of the apparently poisoned elephants are being analysed. The herd of six consisted of three adult females, two adult males (both of which were found with their tusks removed) and one male calf. The herd was found dead in an oil palm plantation in Mahato village, on the border between Riau and North Sumatra Province. Mahato village is about one kilometre from the Mahato Protected Forest, all of which has been converted into settlements and plantations since being declared a protection forest in 1994.

• Crop-raiding Herd: Members of Riau BKSDA and WWF's Tesso Nilo Flying Squad, with two shifts of 300 men each of security forces from the nearby Chevron Pacific Indonesia (CPI/Caltex) oil and gas concession, are currently volunteering to contain the 17 lost elephants near a small remaining patch of forest. The teams prevent them from moving toward houses and fields and only allow them to move towards the forest. The herd will have to be driven back to the area's largest forest, Libo, which will require a major military-style operation, options for which will be discussed at an emergency meeting on Tuesday.

• Flying Squads: As a first, immediate action, PHKA and WWF agreed to assemble a highly mobile quick response team fashioned after the Tesso Nilo Flying Squad that will support the affected communities in case of future raids and patrol the conflict areas. The flying squad approach has been implemented in the buffer zone of Tesso Nilo National Park. A squad consists of four rangers with noise and light-making devices, a pick-up truck and trained elephants who drive wild elephants back into the forest whenever they threaten to enter villages. Since it began operating in April 2004, one Tesso Nilo Flying Squad has reduced the losses of a local community from elephant raids from approximately 16 million Rupiah (US$1,1000) to around 1 million Rupiah (US$109) per month on average.

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International (http://www.wwf.org)
Press consultantship(Olivier van Bogaert)
All rights reserved

 
 
 
 

 

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